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It is well known that a time-varying delay line results in a frequency
shift. Time-varying delay is often used, for example, to provide
vibrato and chorus effects [17]. We
therefore expect a time-varying delay-line to be capable of precise
Doppler simulation. This section discusses simulating the Doppler
effect using a variable delay line
[470].6.6
Consider Doppler shift from a physical point of view. The air can be
considered as analogous to a magnetic tape which moves from
source to listener at speed
(see Fig.5.4). The source is
analogous to the
write-head of a tape recorder, and the listener corresponds to the
read-head. When the source and listener are fixed, the listener
receives what the source records. When either moves, a Doppler shift
is observed by the listener, according
to Eq.(5.2).6.7
Figure 5.4:
Magnetic tape analogy.
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